Tuesday, May 3, 2016

9/11 Commission Chairman: I Know Who Was Responsible For 9/11; FBI Lied To American Public

The controversy surrounding 28 still-classified pages of the 9/11
Commission Report just got more complicated during a new interview with
the chairman of the 9/11 Commission. Former Senator Bob Graham revealed
far more to NPR
than he did in a previous interview with “60 Minutes,” and this
bombshell could rock the nation, and possibly the world, to its core.

NPR asked Graham whether he thought consecutive administrations have
actively protected the Saudi royal family over U.S. interests. Graham’s
reply to that is shocking, to say the least:

“Yes. And I think it’s been more than a cover up. I think it’s
been what I call aggressive deception. There are instances in which the
FBI has publicly released statements which I know from personal
experience were untrue. They stated that in this Sarasota situation –
that they had completed the investigation, that the investigation
determined that there were no connections between the hijackers and the
prominent Saudi family, and that they had turned over all of this
information to both the congressional inquiry and the 9/11 Citizens
Commission. I know for a fact that none of those three statements are
true.”

When pressed further on that, he went on to say:

“It’s more than a cover-up. The FBI misstated what is in their own records relative to the situation in Sarasota.”

So, basically, we have a tangled web of lies relating to the 9/11
investigation that pushed an agenda for the Bush family, and has, sadly,
continued under Obama.

Graham and others said before that one of the biggest reasons these
28 pages are still classified is because they could be very embarrassing
for the Bush family, due to its deep connection to the Saudis. The
families of the 9/11 victims want these pages released, though, and
President Obama has promised to release these papers soon.

Graham is calling for a new investigation into 9/11 – one that’s
honest, and tells the whole truth, even if it makes a whole lot of
people, including Saudi Arabia, look really bad.